Yes, just a simple ceramic tile from Lowes. The table nest is a small stand that will lift your egg off whatever and gives you about 2" of an air gap between the egg and in my case the tile. My egg dealer charged me $17 for it.

Table nest was the right solution for me, this is under my MBGE. Even on long cooks the tile surface under it is warm, but cool enough to touch. The added benefit is that it is easier to clean as a pan fits under the egg and you just rake the ashes out. I couldn't do that when it sat on a paver.

BTW, that is my $$$store drip pan rack on the lower right. $1 and it sits on the setter, raises the drip pan. It is "crud" level stainless, but for <$1, it is almost cheaper than tin foil balls.

Table nest was the right solution for me, this is under my MBGE. Even on long cooks the tile surface under it is warm, but cool enough to touch. The added benefit is that it is easier to clean as a pan fits under the egg and you just rake the ashes out. I couldn't do that when it sat on a paver.

BTW, that is my $$$store drip pan rack on the lower right. $1 and it sits on the setter, raises the drip pan. It is "crud" level stainless, but for <$1, it is almost cheaper than tin foil balls.

Is that a homemade ash-tool or a Wolverine's back-scratcher next to the daisy wheel?

Yes, just a simple ceramic tile from Lowes. The table nest is a small stand that will lift your egg off whatever and gives you about 2" of an air gap between the egg and in my case the tile. My egg dealer charged me $17 for it.

If you use a plain old ceramic tile it will shatter and you will fry your table. Fire bricks are available at most brick supply stores. I found them for $1.75 each. The sizes I found are 2" x 4" x 8" and 1" x 4 " x 8". I bought 8 of each and I can make almost any indirect configuration.